The Pearl Symbolism

550 Words2 Pages

John Steinbeck's “The Pearl” has a very evident use of symbolism in his writing. Symbolism is the Practice of using words to represent items. He uses special items to represent many different things like the canoe, the scorpion, but ultimately the pearl itself is one of the biggest symbols in the entire book. The canoe is a Symbol of life as it is Kino's job that keeps kino into the man he is. LIfe is the existence of an individual and in this book the canoe is the way of life of many different people like kino. Without the canoe there is no pearls to sell and no life to live. To feed his family kino uses the canoe to get pearls to sell, but that is not enough on its own he fishes to feed his family. He needs to ride his canoe farther out into the ocean because there is bigger fish and more fish farther out. Without fish kino would have to work as a servant or other job just to eat. The canoe gives Kino freedom to feed his family on his own and earn his own money. …show more content…

The scorpion is evil it is a thing that hurts all. In the story Coyotito is stung by a evil scorpion that radiated the song of evil like it was his aura. The scorpion was put into this story to put the conflict in motion but it stood for a lot more than that. A scorpion is said to be a curse from the gods or a trial of some sort. The scorpion was sent to sting Coyotito by the gods to Judge and reveal kino who he was. It is not just a coincidence that the scorpion fell onto Coyotito just before its capture it was a curse from a god. The scorpion is the evilest thing to sting a baby and curse a

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